Oddly, my NARIC evaluation came in with some ...interesting... results.
I only went to grade 12 (Senior of High School, USA) for half-days for only 12 weeks, as they switched from a semester to a quarter system and I had enough credits to graduate in November instead of having to wait until the following June. I took four "fluff" courses, to get the needed units. One of which was "Probability and Statistics", a course I should never have been enrolled into as I was completely unprepared and incapable of doing the work (dyscalcula). I got a D-, which was still not a "F" so I passed the course and got the units. NARIC, when evaluating my high school diploma, said that I should be considered as having GSCEs only for the courses I took in year 12. (Totally disregarding the three years of advanced/accelerated English Literature, Latin, and Social Sciences I had taken in grades 9, 10, &11.) The thought of me having a GSCE in Probability and Statistics is seriously, seriously funny.
The teacher gave me credit for getting my name written on the papers, and showing up every day anyway.
They also considered me to have an "Honors" BA, without specifying "1st, 2nd, 3rd class". My overall GPA wasn't in the range quoted in a post above for a First Class, but I had twice the number of undergrad classes completed successfully as a typical BA holder would have, over a 15-year period, so perhaps that tipped the scales to have them just add "Honors" to the title without a level of "Honors"?
My professional Masters (similar to a MBA, but in a different field - a two year academic program with a half-year professional internship) was counted as a Master of Arts degree. My degree is nothing like a MA here - it was entirely more rigorous, with more classes, and longer. But... whatever.
So, unless you really need the NARIC translation, I wouldn't consider them terribly useful and definitely overpriced. Probably not worth the bother for an employment situation - the employer I got the evaluation for told me after I'd paid for the evaluation that they only actually wanted to see my diplomas. (Not even the transcripts of courses taken or grades!)